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  • Original Article
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Progress of PTSD symptoms following birth: a prospective study in mothers of high-risk infants

Abstract

Objective:

To understand how postpartum posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms in mothers of high-risk infants progress and identify what factors predict postpartum PTSD.

Study Design:

We prospectively obtained self-reported psychological data from neonatal intensive care unit discharged infants’ mothers (NICU mothers) at the infants’ corrected ages of 1 (T0), 3 (T1) and 12 months (T2) and mothers of healthy infants (controls). Maternal sociodemographic and infant-related factors were also investigated.

Result:

PTSD was present in 25 and 9% of NICU mothers and controls, respectively. We identified four PTSD patterns: none, persistent, delayed and recovered. The postpartum PTSD course was associated with trait anxiety. Whether the infant was the first child who predicted PTSD at year 1 (adjusted odds ratio=7.62, 95% confidence interval=1.07 to 54.52).

Conclusion:

Mothers of high-risk infants can develop early or late PTSD, and its course can be influenced by factors besides medical status. We therefore recommend regular screenings of postpartum PTSD.

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Correspondence to D-w Rha.

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Kim, W., Lee, E., Kim, K. et al. Progress of PTSD symptoms following birth: a prospective study in mothers of high-risk infants. J Perinatol 35, 575–579 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1038/jp.2015.9

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